Restaurant in Zagreb, Croatia
Balon
210Pearl PointsMichelin-recognised, off the tourist trail.

About Balon
Balon holds a Michelin Plate for the second consecutive year and a 4.6 Google rating across nearly 900 reviews, making it the most practical entry into Zagreb's recognised restaurant tier at €€€. It delivers Mediterranean cooking that justifies the price without the €€€€ commitment of Noel or Nav. Booking is easy, making it a reliable anchor for any Zagreb food itinerary.
Balon, Zagreb: Verdict
Balon earns a clear recommendation for any food-focused visitor to Zagreb. Holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, it delivers Mediterranean cooking at a €€€ price point that sits comfortably below the city's top-tier splurge options, making it the most practical entry point into Zagreb's recognised restaurant circuit. If you want a Michelin-acknowledged meal without committing to the €€€€ spend of Noel or Nav, book here first.
Portrait
Balon sits on Prisavlje 2, close to the Sava riverbank on Zagreb's south side, which already tells you something useful: this is not a tourist-circuit restaurant. It draws a local and professional crowd, and the 4.6 Google rating across 895 reviews suggests it holds that standard consistently rather than coasting on a single strong season.
The Michelin Plate recognition — awarded in consecutive years — signals cooking that the guide's inspectors consider worth eating, even if it stops short of star territory. In practical terms, that distinction matters. A Plate tells you the kitchen is technically competent and consistent; it does not guarantee the kind of transformative tasting-menu experience you might find at Nebo by Deni Srdoč in Rijeka or Agli Amici Rovinj. What it does guarantee, combined with a strong public rating, is reliability , which is often exactly what you need when you have one evening in a city and cannot afford a disappointment.
The cuisine type is Mediterranean, a broad category that in Zagreb tends to mean a kitchen drawing on Adriatic ingredients and Croatian coastal traditions rather than a strict Italian or Spanish idiom. For the food-focused traveller who wants to understand what Croatian fine dining looks like in the capital, Balon provides a useful reference point before you travel to more regionally specific restaurants such as Korak in Jastrebarsko or Krug in Split.
Lunch vs Dinner at Balon
Lunch versus dinner question at Balon is worth thinking through carefully. Zagreb's better-recognised restaurants frequently offer their most compelling value at midday , shorter menus, lower set-lunch prices, and the same kitchen team executing the same recipes. Without confirmed menu data for Balon, it would be wrong to state specific pricing, but the general pattern holds across the city's €€€ tier: lunch is the rational choice if your schedule allows it. You get the Michelin-recognised cooking without the full evening spend, and the room tends to be quieter, which suits conversation.
Dinner at a restaurant in Balon's tier serves a different purpose. If you are marking a special occasion, celebrating with a group, or want the fuller rhythm of a multi-course meal with wine, the evening sitting is the right call. The €€€ positioning means you are not overcommitting financially, and at that price level the service is likely to match the occasion without the formality pressure of the city's most expensive rooms. For a special dinner at a more intensive price point, Noel is the comparison to make; Balon is the choice when you want the quality signal without the €€€€ commitment.
If your trip includes only one Zagreb dinner at this tier, the evening remains the default recommendation , both for the atmosphere and because it is the format in which Mediterranean kitchens typically show the most range. But if you are spending several days in the city and want to work through the full Zagreb restaurant scene, using Balon for lunch frees budget for a dinner at a complementary venue such as Dubravkin Put or Bekal.
Context: Balon in Croatia's Wider Fine-Dining Picture
Zagreb's restaurant scene has developed meaningfully over the past few years, but the city's Michelin representation remains modest compared to the Adriatic coast. Balon holding consecutive Plates is a real signal in that context. For the explorer-type traveller building a Croatian restaurant itinerary, Balon works well as the Zagreb anchor before coastal meals at places like Alfred Keller in Mali Lošinj or Restaurant 360 in Dubrovnik. It gives you a calibrated starting point: you will know what the capital's recognised tier tastes like, which sharpens your read on everything that follows.
Within Mediterranean cuisine specifically, Balon sits in a competitive international category. If you are travelling from or through southern Europe and have recently eaten at La Brezza in Ascona or Il Buco in Sorrento, you will arrive with a calibrated reference frame. Balon is not trying to compete with established Italian or Swiss Mediterranean restaurants on ingredient provenance or cellar depth; it is making a case for what Zagreb's version of this cuisine looks like, and on that narrower terms, the Michelin recognition suggests it makes that case well.
For broader Zagreb planning, the city's bar and hotel scenes are covered in our full Zagreb bars guide and full Zagreb hotels guide. If wine is central to your trip, the Zagreb wineries guide and Zagreb experiences guide add useful depth.
Practical Details
| Detail | Balon | Dubravkin Put | Noel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€€ | €€€ | €€€€ |
| Cuisine | Mediterranean | Mediterranean | Modern |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024, 2025) | Check Pearl page | Check Pearl page |
| Google rating | 4.6 (895 reviews) | Check Pearl page | Check Pearl page |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Harder |
| Leading for | Lunch value, special dinners | Garden dining | Full tasting experience |
Also worth considering for a complete Zagreb restaurant week: Theatrium by Filho and Izakaya for contrast at different price points.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Balon?
Book at least one to two weeks out for weekday dinner; weekend slots at a Michelin Plate venue in Zagreb fill faster than most visitors expect. Balon sits on Prisavlje 2, away from the main tourist circuit, which means it draws a local crowd that books consistently. Call or email directly, since no online booking link is publicly listed.
What should I order at Balon?
Balon's menu is not published in the venue record, so specific dish recommendations aren't available here. What the Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 does confirm is that the kitchen is executing Mediterranean cuisine at a consistent standard worth ordering across multiple courses rather than eating light.
Is Balon worth the price?
At €€€ pricing in Zagreb, Balon sits at the upper end of the local market, but that bracket is still meaningfully cheaper than equivalent Michelin-recognised Mediterranean restaurants in Dubrovnik or Split. Two consecutive Michelin Plates suggest the kitchen is earning the price point. For visitors used to Western European fine-dining spend, the value case is strong.
Does Balon handle dietary restrictions?
No dietary policy is documented in available venue data. At a €€€ Mediterranean restaurant with Michelin recognition, kitchens at this level typically accommodate common restrictions when notified at booking, but contact Balon directly before arrival rather than assuming.
Is Balon good for a special occasion?
Yes, with a qualifier on setting. Balon's Prisavlje address puts it on Zagreb's south side near the Sava, which gives it a quieter, more local feel than the old-town tourist venues. If you want a celebration with energy and spectacle, that setting may feel low-key. If the priority is food quality and a more composed room, two Michelin Plates back the choice.
Is Balon good for solo dining?
Mediterranean restaurants at this price range in Zagreb are not typically counter-format venues, so solo dining is feasible but you may be seated at a table for two. The off-centre Prisavlje location and food-focused crowd make it a more comfortable solo option than a louder, group-oriented city-centre spot like Izakaya.
What should I wear to Balon?
No dress code is documented for Balon, but €€€ pricing and Michelin Plate recognition in Croatia signals a room where smart, neat dress is appropriate. Trainers and beachwear would be out of place; a jacket is not required based on the venue's positioning relative to Zagreb's dining norms.
Location
Prisavlje 2, 10000, Zagreb, Croatia
Compare Balon
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balon | Mediterranean Cuisine | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | , |
| Noel | Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | , |
| Dubravkin Put | Mediterranean Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | , |
| Izakaya | Japanese Contemporary | World's 50 Best | Unknown | , |
| ManO2 | Croatian | Unknown | , | |
| Nav | Creative | Unknown | , |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Noel, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Dubravkin Put, Mediterranean Cuisine, €€€
- Izakaya, Japanese Contemporary, €
- ManO2, Croatian, €€€
- Nav, Creative, €€€€
Within Zagreb's €€€ tier, Balon's closest direct comparison is Dubravkin Put, which shares the Mediterranean cuisine category and the same price band. Dubravkin Put has a strong reputation for its garden setting and is often the first recommendation for visitors who want atmosphere alongside food. Balon counters with consecutive Michelin Plate recognition, which gives it a clearer quality signal if the cooking matters more to you than the room. For a first Zagreb dinner at this tier, Balon is the safer bet on culinary grounds; Dubravkin Put is the choice if you are prioritising a specific outdoor experience.
If budget is the primary variable, Izakaya operates at the € tier and offers a completely different cuisine profile, Japanese Contemporary, but it is the city's strongest lower-cost option for quality-focused diners who want to preserve budget for other meals. At the other end, Noel and Nav both sit at €€€€ and represent Zagreb's most ambitious kitchens. Noel in particular is the benchmark for Modern Cuisine in the city; if you want the full fine-dining format and are comfortable with the higher spend, book there. Balon is the rational middle ground: Michelin-acknowledged, competitively priced, and easy to book.
ManO2 covers Croatian cuisine at the €€€ level and is worth considering if you specifically want to eat through a local lens rather than a broader Mediterranean one. For a two-dinner Zagreb stay, a logical pairing is Balon for one meal and either ManO2 or Dubravkin Put for the other, giving you range across cuisine styles at the same price tier without repeating the same experience. See our full Zagreb restaurants guide for the complete picture.
Recognized By
Explore Zagreb
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